Travelling Across the Solar System at the Speed of Light

By Anupum Pant

The ultimate universal speed limit is the speed of light. No information travels faster than that, or that is what we’ve always known. So, the point is, it is pretty darn fast. But that ultimate speed in the massiveness of our cosmos can seem pretty darn tiny. It’s hard to visualize how big things are in our universe.

Ignoring a few laws of physics, on what the photon actually sees considering relativity, Alphonse Swinehart created an animation which takes you on a journey across the solar system as if you were sitting on a photon. See how at around 8 minutes 20 seconds you reach the earth, taking exactly the amount of time the sunlight takes to reach us.  While watching it please note that it was intentional  that the alignment of planets and asteroids in the video were not kept realistic. That’s artistic freedom…

The video ends at Jupiter because the artist wanted to keep the length of it less than 1 hour. Anyway, the video does deliver its purpose and does it with great artistry.

Riding Light from Alphonse Swinehart on Vimeo.

Wolves and Their Impact on the Physical Geography

By Anupum Pant

Presence, or introduction of wolf population in an ecosystem can actually affect how the rivers flow and the other physical geography of the place. This is probably the most interesting thing I found in recent times. If not more, it is as interesting as the affect wind has on a tree’s life.

The most convincing example of the impact of wolves on the physical geography of an ecosystem is probably what was seen fairly recently in the Yellowstone National Park. It has to be listed among one of the most exciting scientific understandings in the last century. It’s called the Trophic cascade – An ecological process that starts at the top of a food chain and its affect is seen at the bottom of the food chain.

The last wolves of Yellowstone National Park were killed around the 1920s and since then the population of deer had been causing a severe vegetation scarcity in the ecology of the park. A solution was suggested by biologists that wolves be brought back to bring the balance back. Wolves are seen as killers. It isn’t very easy to superficially investigate their role in how deeply they can affect the ecology, even the physical geography of a place.

So, in the year 1995 wolves were brought back to the national park. Like they would in the wild, they started with killing deer for food. Of course it controlled the population of deer, which humans had not been able to do in spite of many efforts, but the cascading affect this introduction had was even more dramatic. They changed how deer population behaved.

Now, to avoid confrontation with the wolves, deer population started avoiding certain areas in the park. The places being avoided now started regenerating. On an average, trees started growing taller. Barren lands in the park started growing into thick forests within a few years. This attracted the birds. And then the beavers came in. And we already have seen in the past how beavers can affect the flow of rivers

As a result, all kinds of animals bears, mice, eagles etc. started appearing. Ultimately, the introduction of wolves actually changed how rivers flowed there. From more vegetation, erosion became less, rivers started flowing in more fixed straight narrow channels and more pools – perfect for the wildlife.

Goat Menace in the Galapagos Islands

By Anupum Pant

Just two of the many remote archipelagos of the Galapagos islands in the Pacific ocean are home to some of the most magnificent creatures here on earth – The Galapagos tortoises. These are giant tortoises that can weigh up to 300 kg and usually go on to live for more than 100 years, even up to 170 years in rare cases.

Only thing, their existence is now threatened. About 1,500 exist today. Back in the day, some hundreds of years back, it is estimated that there used to be as many as 250,000 such tortoises living in the Galapagos archipelagos. But thanks to the passing sailors of the yore, these beautiful reptiles  got massacred for oil and food. That caused a massive decline around the 70s and now we have the results.

That’s not all these sailors did. They also introduced several non native species into the islands. Goats were one of them – the most relevant ones in this context. These goats multiplied like wild fire and soon there were tens of thousands of goats finishing off vegetation in the islands. In the islands they were never even supposed to be in the first place. This corrupted the ecological balance and proved to be a menace for the existence of giant tortoises. As if we already had too many to lose.

Concerned conservationists wanted to fix this. For that they devised a not very pretty technique to accomplish the task. Goats had to be gone.

Sharpshooters were brought in from New Zealand. Judas goats, with GPS collars were prepared and released into the island. While these spy goats were searching for a pack of goats to socialize with, the sharpshooters were being flown in helicopters, tracking the judas goats to the pack of goats. Packs were located this way, sharpsooters individually shot each one of the pack members and let the GPS equipped goat go away to find them another such group of goats.

The video below is not for the weak hearted. Also, there’s a one hour long radiolab episode which talks in detail about this situation, attached below the video.

Radioactive Bananas and Most Radioactive Places

By Anupum Pant

Although radiation would be last of your worries, but eating 20 million bananas would kill you due to radiation poisoning, if not due to anything else. That is because bananas emit ionising radiation which is bad for you. But, as the amount of radiation dose you’d get if you eat a banana would be almost the same that you’d get from the background radiation while sitting in your balcony for an hour, you shouldn’t really worry.

Bananas are slightly radioactive because they contain potassium. The element decays and emits radiation which can kick electrons out of atoms – ionising radiation. In fact, everything emits trace amounts of radiations.

Wood Turned to Stone

By Anupum Pant

For a whole semester I had not noticed a huge 5500 pound log in front of one of the buildings at college which I used to pass by everyday. Probably because trees are everywhere and to prevent me from getting overwhelmed with excess information, my subconscious chose to filter it out. Today, while parking my bike I did chose to give it a conscious look. There was a board by the log which mentioned what it was and it was clearly something that was worth displaying.

petrified woodThis thing I was looking at was a petrified wood specimen. Yes, a piece of wood that turned into rock several million years ago. It was 220 million years old. Elated, I posted its picture on my instagram. This is what it looks like.

At first, not knowing how it must have formed, I thought it must be due to high pressures, like diamonds are formed. However after going through some text online I found out that the process by which these things are formed is very different from how gems like diamonds are formed.

Very specific conditions need to be met in order for a wood to turn into stone. It starts with a piece or a stump of dead tree getting engulfed with sediments or something else. This prevents it from coming in contact with the atmospheric oxygen. The cut off oxygen supply delays the decomposition of this log. So, now the log would take centuries before it is decomposed. It remains intact inside.

Now, if the wood comes in contact with mineral rich water or volcanic as (in ways that doesn’t burn the wood), the water starts soaking into it and starts replacing the organic matter with minerals. The whole log’s cell and fibre structure is preserved because all of this takes place at a microscopic scale. Over millions of years these minerals like silica crystallize and forms the petrified wood. The rate at which this whole process occurs is not very well known.

326346_1348795063If there’s just silica, they aren’t usually coloured. But if it gets infused with other element rich minerals like copper, cobalt, manganese etc, these woods can end up getting lined with beautiful colours. Other times silica can crystallize in different form an create an opal inside a wood. These make rare and beautiful gems like this one. [more pictures]

Due to the crystals that are formed in it, these usually break with clean cuts and give it an appearance like the wood stem was cut using a chainsaw.

Petrified wood is not too rare. Often, you can find them strewn over rock formations. I would very much like to stumble over one some time. I still consider it precious because it’s millions of years of history sealed in wood. But then that can be said about every stone you come across. This however is something that happens when very special conditions come together.

Sometimes whole forests get petrified and among these some trees can remain standing. In such cases a standing petrified stump is a beauty to watch. Here’s a 15 million year old standing petrified wood caught on video.

Researchers have made instant petrified wood in laboratories too. For this, a few material scientists from Pacific Northwest National Laboratory cut a cube of wood and gave it an acid and silica bath a couple of times, air dried it and then cooked it for 2 hours in an argon filled furnace at 1400 degrees Celsius. [Link]

Petrified wood is often cut into little pieces, polished and used in lapidary work, or to make jewellery. Tabletops are made out of slabs cut out of huge logs.

[Ref 1] [Ref 2] [Ref 3]

Massive Amounts of Gold in the Sea

By Anupum Pant

We’ve been mining gold for about 6000 years now. It isn’t totally clear how much has been mined yet. Still, there are a few reliable estimates which say that about 150,000 to 170,000 tonnes of gold has been mined till date. The 170,000 tonnes figure is the most reliable estimate, which would mean that the amount of gold ever mined can fit in a not-so-massive cube with each side measuring 21 meters. However, some estimates take the figure up to 2.5 million tonnes.

That said, how much more is yet to be mined then? A good estimate is that about 52000 tonnes of gold is still out there that can be realistically mined. But is that all?

No. 52000 tonnes of left over gold might be economically viable, but there are places here on earth which hold massive amounts of gold. It is in the oceans. No, not in treasure chests of sunken pirate ships.

In the ocean waters there’s about 20 million tonnes of gold waiting to get harvested. Although there isn’t a good method by which this can be extracted, it sure is a massive amount of gold. The gold is so spread out in the waters that you’d have to process billions of litres of water to find one gram of gold. The concentration is in the orders of parts per trillion. No one knows how to extract that.

Now, that’s the gold dissolved in water. There’s also gold trapped in the sea bed, just like we have it here on land, in rocks. Even that is 4-5 kilometres under the sea. And it’s trapped in rock there. So, no one has a good way to extract that too.

via [Oceanservice]

National Radio Quiet Zone

By Anupum Pant

541px-National_Radio_Quiet_Zone.svgThis 13,000 square miles of rectangular land, somewhere in the US, is the national radio quiet zone – or NRQZ.

Some of it falls in Virginia and the other major part of it is west Virginia. A tiny part of Maryland (on the top) is also included.

Living in the NRQZ means that the people who choose to live there have to sign a contract saying that they’ll never own some of the modern equipments like wi-fi, microwave, a wireless telephone etc. People living there are banned from using almost anything that uses electricity and could possibly cause a radio interference. That is because the rectangular NRQZ is home to one of the largest radio telescopes at the  National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO) at Green Bank, west Virginia.

Any wireless transmitters in this very interesting piece of land spanning about 10 miles in all directions of the radio telescope has a potential to cause an interference. It’s like the 50s in here. No cellphones there. Life’s pretty different and it’s for the good of scientists from all over the world who wish to use this world-class piece of technology. This small film talks about it…

via [the Atlantic]

Liquid Nitrogen on the Streets of NYC

By Anupum Pant

Liquid Nitrogen, also known as LN2 is an odourless, colourless, non-flammable nitrogen. It’s extremely cold with a boiling point of -196°C and has great dangers associated with it if it is not handled properly.

And yet, 2 huge pressurized canisters of Liquid nitrogen can be seen at one of the very important public places. In Manhattan, at the intersection of 6th avenue and the 50th street, in front of the well known radio city music hall, sit these 2 big canisters of Liquid Nitrogen. Probably thousands pass by these potentially dangerous cryogen containers everyday. Still, never has an accident occurred there.

Why these containers are there is a good question to ask. And they have been kept there for a very good reason. These canisters belong to a phone company and are used to keep the underground phone cables cool, dry and free from oxygen. Because these wires getting wet from the underground municipal system, isn’t very desirable to the phone company. The nitrogen continuously keeps circulating and finishes off in about three days. The canisters are then replaced.

Here’s a Google street view image I captured where these Liquid Nitrogen canisters can be seen on the sidewalk.

50th street

Tom Scott talks about them.

What Makes Rivers Curvy

By Anupum Pant

Rivers are never straight. What makes them curvy is something I never questioned in the first place.

What’s really fascinating is, how these curves form. They are almost always in pairs, alternating curves, unless there’s some geographical feature messing with the natural flow. From a hypothetical straight line river, these curves start forming when there’s even a slight aberration in the bank.

Besides that thicker a streams make bigger curves. And smaller tributaries meander in tighter turns. This is what makes rivers (with their smaller tributaries turning tighter and bigger ones in bigger curves) look like fractals on the surface of the earth.

Minute earth explains…

The Apocalypse of 1910

By Anupum Pant

Halley’s Comet is a short-period comet and is visible from Earth every 75–76 years.In fact it is the only short-period comet that can be viewed without any telescopes from the surface of earth.Since it comes close every 75-76 years, a human can either see it only once or twice in their life time (or zero times, for really un lucky people).It last appeared in 1986 and is set to come back in the year 2061. Before 1986, it was going to enter the inner solar system in the year 1910. That was when it created a great turmoil among mankind.

Back in 1910 when it was predicted that Haley’s comet would pass very close to the earth, it was a matter of concern for everyone who read this in the newspaper. Later, astronomers realized that the 25 million kilometre trail of the comet would be passed by the earth. That was apparently too dangerous.

Using spectroscopy, Yerkes Observatory reported that the comet’s trail contained a lethal gas called cyanogen. New York times and other popular newspapers created headlines that suggested, humans would have to deal with this deadly gas when earth passes through the trail of Haley’s comet. An apocalypse was, sort of, predicted. Scientists tried to quell this unfounded fear among the people, but like always, it wasn’t really effective.

People rushed to buy gas masks to protect themselves from this deadly gas. Even “comet pills” were sold in abundance.  As smithsonian puts it…

people in Georgia were preparing safe rooms and covering even keyholes with paper. (One man, the paper said, had “armed himself with a gallon of whiskey” and requested that friends lower him to the bottom of a dry well, 40 feet deep.)

comet pillsObviously, nothing of that sort happened. And it was just one of those notable apocalypse predictions that never happened. Though it was interesting that people were convinced enough to buy “comet pills” – I never knew these things even existed.

Morning Glory Clouds

By Anupum Pant

In the southern part of the Gulf of Carpentaria in Northern Australia from late September to early November a rare natural phenomenon is witnessed by thousands of tourists and locals of Burketown who come to see it – The rolling morning glory clouds.

These are huge 1000 km long rolling clouds appear about 1-2 km from ground every year. This is the only place where they are seen regularly and can be predicted. Some times just one, other times tens of them go rolling in the skies at speeds of 10-20 meters per second.

The Morning Glory cloud is not clearly understood because their rarity means they have little significance in terms of rainfall or climate.Regardless of the complexity behind the nature of this atmospheric phenomenon, some conclusions have been made about its causes. Through research, one of the main causes of most Morning Glory occurrences is the mesoscale circulations associated with sea breezes that develop over the peninsula and the gulf.

These have been seen in Japan and several other places too.

Growing Glaciers

By Anupum Pant

It is believed that for centuries in the Hindu Kush and Karakoram mountain region villagers have been practising something called glacier growing (or glacier grafting). Yes, literally making their own new glacier. This is done in order to increase the water supply for crops, for survival.

In order to encourage the growth of a glacier local farmers acquire ice from naturally occurring glaciers, and carry it to high altitude areas where the ice is put inside a small cave dug out in a scree-slope. Along with the ice other ingredients such as water, salt, sawdust, wheat husks and charcoal are also placed at the site.

Grow-a-Glacier

It is believed by the local people that there are male and female glaciers. The male ones, they believe, are covered in soil or stones and move very less. While the female glaciers are whiter, grow faster and yield more water. It is also believed that to grow a glacier, equal amounts of both sexes are needed.

[Read More]

Rivers That Meet But Do Not Mix

By Anupum Pant

Manaus is the capital city of the state of Amazonas in northern Brazil. The city is situated at about a 10 kilometre distance from the confluence of the Negro and Solimões rivers – two big tributaries of the Amazon river. While these are two names which you must haven’t probably heard of, the place where they meet is a very interesting place.

The first river, Rio Solimões is a water body full of sediments that wash down with it from the Andes mountains. Thanks to the sand, mud and silt that comes washing with it, the river looks muddy, the colour is light brown, nearly. The locals call it the white river.

On the other hand, we have the Negro river (or Rio Negro). It has significantly darker coloured water due to the presence of humic acid from incomplete breakdown of phenol-containing vegetation from sandy clearings. Although the locals call it the black river, it isn’t exactly black. The colour is very similar to a black tea concoction. However, the colour of Rio Negro is very different from Rio Solimões. Here’s how they look from up above.

encontro-das-aguas-em-manaus-9 solimoes and negro meeting

At the place where they meet, the rivers don’t mix. They leave a fairly clear boundary and flow side by side without mixing for about six kilometres. That happens because of the big difference in their flow speed, density and temperature.

While the river Solimões is a fast flowing (6 km per hour), high density (due to the sediments) and cooler river, the other river flows much slower (one third of the speed of Solimões river), is warmer and is less dense (because it is much cleaner). These differences cause the rivers to meet and not mix. Much later, about 6 kilometres later, these differences attain equilibrium and the rivers merge into the main Amazon river.

Ice Circles

By Anupum Pant

Perfect circles of ice have been seen spinning on top of water bodies for quite some time. They aren’t perfectly round most times. Recently, in the month of November last year, a huge 17 meter spinning ice disk was spotted on the river Sheyenne in North Dakota.

Several such ice disks have also been seen in the past in Canada, England and Sweden. Similar ice swirls were also seen in the Charles river, Boston. Some times they are huge, other times you see a number of tiny clusters of such ice swirls.

As always, even ice circles aren’t the work of aliens or government spies. It is completely a natural phenomena which occurs when slowly moving water moves past an obstacle creating a slow moving eddy. In due time, and due to very low temperatures, ice circles form small and keep growing as rings of frozen water on the surface of the water body keeps adding to their diameters. Here’s a video of one such big, and almost perfect, ice circle which was spotted in Rattray Marsh, Canada.